I find myself (as I'm sure everyone does) dealing with lists of
structured data, e.g., a list of lists, each of which contains n
elements with each entry representing a unique field. What is the most
conventional way to identify each of these elements when iterating over
the whole list? Obviously I can use [[...]]/Part, but I'm wondering if
there's something considered more elegant.
Take a concrete example where I have a CSV containing ZIP code data,
with seven fields: the zip code, latitude, longitude, city, state,
county, and class. What's the usual way of addressing this? I can
think of two obvious ones; just define symbolic names for the indices:
data = Import[..., "CSV"];
{ZIPCODE, LATITUDE, LONGITUDE, CITY, STATE, COUNTY, CLASS} = Range[7];
ListPlot[{#[[LONGITUDE]], #[[LATITUDE]]} & /@ data,
PlotStyle -> PointSize[0.001]]
or define functions (with or without the symbolic index names):
latitude[x_] := x[[2]];
longitude[x_] := x[[3]];
ListPlot[{longitude[#], latitude[#]} & /@ data,
PlotStyle -> PointSize[0.001]]
What's consider more in Mathematica's style, or is there something else
more commonly used I'm not thinking of?
On that general subject, are there generally-respected Mathematical
style guides floating around somewhere? I'm not necessarily looking for
rigid codified rules, just for "accepted" (more or less) conventional
ways of getting things done. I'm relatively new to Mathematica but by
no means new to programming and am fluent in many other languages (C,
C++, Python, etc.), so I'm just looking for ideas about "the way things
are done" that go well with Mathematica's functional nature but are
still self-documenting as much as possible.
Thanks.
--
Erik Max Francis && max at alcyone.com && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
San Jose, CA, USA && 37 18 N 121 57 W && AIM/Y!M/Skype erikmaxfrancis
The chicken was the egg's idea of getting more eggs.
-- Samuel Butler